Know your enemy, because they know you.
They know the American people are not going to tolerate removing the police. So they are going to offer a compromise solution.
A second police force, accountable to them. It's what they do. It's what they know. It's what they want to impose on you.
Who are Islamic 'morality police'?
IRAN
Name: Gasht-e Ershad (Persian for Guidance Patrols), supported by Basij militia.
Who they are: Iran has had various forms of "morality police" since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, but the Gasht-e Ershad are currently the main agency tasked enforcing Iran's Islamic code of conduct in public. Their focus is on ensuring observance of hijab - mandatory rules requiring women to cover their hair and bodies and discouraging cosmetics.
SAUDI ARABIA
Name: Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, or Mutawa (Arabic for Particularly obedient to God)
Who they are: Formed in 1940, the Mutawa is tasked with enforcing Islamic religious law - Sharia - in public places.
This includes rules forbidding unrelated males and females to socialise in public, as well as a dress code that encourages women to wear a veil covering all but their eyes. Instead of a police-style uniform, they wear a traditional Saudi robe and keffiyeh.
SUDAN
Name: Public Order Police
Who they are: The Public Order Police was set up in 1993 to enforce Sharia enshrined in law for Muslims in the then-northern Sudan by President Omar al-Bashir. They have the power to arrest, and suspects are tried - often at speed - in special Public Order Courts; punishments can include flogging or prison.
MALAYSIA
Name: Various, usually collectively known as "religious officers"
Who they are: These are bodies run by Malaysia's federal states - or the federal government for federal territories - to enforce Sharia, which applies to the two thirds of the population who are Muslim.
They have the power of arrest, and possible offences range from day-time eating during Ramadan to women and men being "in close proximity".
Cases are tried by Sharia courts separate from the ordinary court system.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-36101150
Same dude, yeah.